This week's Movies to See Right Now

Bryce Dallas Howard and Matt Damon in Hereafter

The Must See films in theaters this week remain Inside Job and The Social Network.  Hereafter and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest are also good choices.

Charles Ferguson’s brilliant documentary Inside Job may be the most important movie of the year. It is a harsh but fair explanation of the misdeeds that led to the recent near-collapse of the global financial system. Unexpectedly, the film begins in Iceland, setting the stage for the collapse and kicking off the easily understandable explanations of the various tricks and bamboozles that have hidden behind their own complexity.

Hereafter: For the first time, Clint Eastwood and screenwriter Peter Morgan (The Queen, Frost/Nixon, The Damned United) venture into the supernatural with the story of three people and their individual experiences with death. The most skeptical, nonspiritual viewer (me) finds this to be a compelling film.

The question of What Comes Next is unanswered, and less interesting than the film’s observations of what happens on this Earth to living humans. Eastwood’s genius is in delivering moments of complete truthfulness, one after the other, across a wide range of settings, from intimate human encounters to the big CGI-enhanced action sequence at the beginning of the film. Eastwood is an actor’s director, and star Matt Damon leads a set of excellent performances, especially by Bryce Dallas Howard, Frankie McLaren, Cecile de France and Richard Kind.

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest is an acceptable final chapter in Stieg Larsson’s Millenium trilogy and best as the showcase for Noomi Rapace’s final performance as Lisbeth Salander. If you’ve seen the first two movies, you should complete the trilogy by seeing this somewhat plodding film. As with the first two films, Hornet’s Nest centers on Rapace’s Lisbeth, a tiny fury of a Goth hacker, damaged and driven. Lisbeth is always mad AND always gets even.

The Social Network: The birth story of Facebook is a riveting tale of college sophomores that are brilliant, ambitious, immature, self-absorbed and disloyal – and about to become zillionaires. It’s a triumph for actor Jesse Eisenberg (Adventureland, Zombieland and Solitary Man), director David Fincher (Fight Club, Zodiac) and screenwriter Aaron Sorkin (A Few Good Men, The West Wing, Charlie Wilson’s War). It’s already on my list of Best Movies of 2010 – So Far.

Leaving (Partir) is a romantic tragedy with another powerful performance by Kristin Scott Thomas and not much else.  Howl has a fine performance by James Franco, but is marred by an unsuccessful animation. The Town is hanging around theaters and, without strongly recommending it, I can say that it is a satisfying Hollywood thriller.

For trailers and other choices, see Movies to See Right Now.

I have not yet seen Welcome to the Rileys, which is just opening. This Sundance hit features James Gandolfini as a Midwestern plumbing contractor who visits New Orleans for a conference, meets teen runaway Kristin Stewart, and decides to stay. I also haven’t seen Fair Game, the Valerie Plame/Joe Wilson story. You can see the trailers at Movies I’m Looking Forward To.

My DVD of the Week is I’ve Loved You So Long.   My top two American films of the year are now available on DVD – the indie Winter’s Bone and Pixar’s Toy Story 3.   For my recent DVD choices (including trailers), see DVDs of the Week.

Movies on TV include The Best Years of Our Lives, Harlan County U.S.A., The Crimson Kimono and Picnic at Hanging Rock on TCM.   More on The Crimson Kimono tomorrow.

Sam Fuller's The Crimson Kimono

Updated Movies to See Right Now

Jesse Eisenberg in The Social Network

Make sure that you see The Social Network.   The birth story of Facebook is a riveting tale of college sophomores that are brilliant, ambitious, immature, self-absorbed and disloyal – and about to become zillionaires.  It’s a triumph for actor Jesse Eisenberg (Adventureland, Zombieland and Solitary Man), director David Fincher (Fight Club, Zodiac) and screenwriter Aaron Sorkin (A Few Good Men, The West Wing, Charlie Wilson’s War).  It’s already on my list of Best Movies of 2010 – So Far.

I’m still pushing the hardhitting documentary The Tillman Story. Without strongly recommending it, I can say that The Town is a satisfying Hollywood thriller.  You can skip Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps and You Will Meet a Tall, Dark Stranger.

For trailers and other choices, see Movies to See Right Now.

My DVD of the Week, like The Social Network, is a classic send up of contemporary business history:  Barbarians at the Gate.     For my recent DVD choices (including trailers), see DVDs of the Week.

I’m featuring Hail! The Conquering Hero on TV this week.  Other Movies on TV include  Strangers on a Train, The Big Sleep and The Best Years of Our Lives, all coming up on TCM.  Baseball fans might still be able to find Ken Burns’ The Tenth Inning on PBS.

For the 4th of July Weekend – Ten Patriotic Movies

I haven’t found any other acceptable lists of patriotic movies.  Other lists tend to be less patriotic and more jingoistic and nationalistic, less about celebrating the essential American values and triumphs (sometimes triumphs over ourselves) than about dominating some furriners in war or sport.  That’s why Top Gun and Miracle show up on those lists, but not mine.

Throughout our history,  American patriots have taken risks and made sacrifices for ideas and causes greater than themselves.  Here are ten movies that celebrate that authentic patriotism.

1. Casablanca:  Our greatest film also depicts the decision to make a painful personal sacrifice, abandoning the love of one’s life, to join the risky fight against fascism, racism and fundamental evil.  “I’m no good at being noble, but it doesn’t take much to see that the problems of three little people don’t amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world.”Now that’s the essence of patriotism.

Rick is good at being noble, after all.

 

 

 

2.  John Adams: There was a time when the English subjects in North America needed to be convinced to seek Independence.  There was a time – a long time – when the outcome of the war for that Independence was uncertain.  There was a time when the winners of that war needed to invent a new government.  And then the new government needed to be led by people without experience in self-government.  John Adams, the most overlooked giant of our Founding Fathers,  was a central player in all of these dramatic events and is the subject of this brilliant mini-series.

Unique among the Founding Fathers, his day-to-day activities were frankly chronicled in hundreds of letters to and from his wife of fifty-four years, Abigail.  These surviving letters comprise one of the most essential first-hand accounts of the founding of America, and, of course, also reveal much about the talented but prickly Adams and the Adams’ relationship.

 

 

 

3.  Gettysburg:  This is the best Civil War movie, shot on the actual battlefield with thousands of re-enactors.  It makes this list because it highlights the character of Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain (Jeff Daniels), a professor of rhetoric and theology, who finds himself leading a few men to defend his army’s most vulnerable position; the screenplay uses Chamberlain to verbalize the rationale for his commitment to preserve the world’s flagship democracy.

 

 

 

4.  To Kill a Mockingbird:   Atticus Finch is compelled to pursue truth, justice and fair play, and he is committed to reaching those outcomes in the American justice system that he cherishes.  In doing so, he rejects the expectations of his time and place, and he risks his community standing, his family’s comfort and security and his own personal safety.

 

 

 

5.  Saving Private Ryan:  A high school teacher is thrust onto history’s biggest stage: the Allied invasion of Nazi-held Normandy.  He is assigned a dangerous mission that he understands has public relations value, but little military tactical importance.   He appreciates how high are the risks and how little the impact that the mission will have on the outcome of the War, yet maintains his focus on the success of his mission and the safety of his men.

 

 

 

6.  The Best Years of Our Lives:    A war ends, and it’s time to total up the sacrifices made by both those who fought and their loved ones, and to recognize how they have been changed by their experiences.  Check out this beautifully re-cut trailer.

 

 

 

7:  Eyes on the Prize: American’s Civil Rights Years 1954-1965:  July 4, 1776, is the start, not the apex, of the American journey.  Since then, we have been working to fashion a more ideal America – in both tiny increments and great strides, with missteps along the way.  This series tells the story of a great stride – accomplished by underdogs.

 

 

 

8.  Seven Days in May:  Is patriotism about nationalism (us against outsiders), or is it a devotion to the American core principle of democracy?  That’s the central question in this thriller about a plotted military coup in the United States.

 

 

 

9.  In Harm’s Way:  This is the closest to a conventional war movie on this list, but one about Americans facing a conflict with determination despite being uncertain of the outcome.  It depicts even the most troubled American making the ultimate sacrifice for a greater good.  Otto Preminger introduces his own trailer:

 

 

 

10.  Baseball:  This is the Ken Burns nine part history of baseball.  There is some heroism here (Jackie Robinson, Branch Rickey), but mostly this film makes the list to celebrate an essential thread in the American fabric.  Like our culture, baseball has rules, history, customs, competition, winners and losers. Like our country, baseball has been shaped by immigration, urbanization and new technologies.   Like our nation’s history, baseball’s history is replete with racists, greedy capitalists, cheaters, solid role models, eccentrics, innovators, visionaries and idealists.  Baseball has its own language, food and iconography, and is generally one of the most consistently sweet things about America. For better or for worse, there is nothing more American than baseball, and what’s more patriotic than watching Baseball?